Vivid
details of the role played by the police in Rivers State during the aborted
arrest of a judge of the Federal High court in Port Harcourt, in the early
hours of Saturday emerged yesterday, after sources disclosed that the
Directorate of State Services, DSS, in the state informed the Commissioner of
Police about the operation before it started. It was gathered that the DSS in
the state had earlier called to inform the Commissioner of Police, Francis
Odesanya, that his men were going to effect the arrest. The police boss
reportedly complied accordingly by directing his men to cooperate and give them
all necessary support.
According to police sources, it was in the early hours
of the morning and nobody would have been expected to open his doors freely to
visitors, so, the judge refused to open his doors to DSS officials. The source
said: “The DSS office shares the same fence with that of the judge. If they had
wanted to accomplish the arrest successfully without much fuss, there are many
options left for them.
‘’They should have either scaled the fence to enter the
compound or gone with the necessary instruments for the operation.
‘’The
governor arrived there with a retinue of members of his cabinet and members of
the House of Assembly. While the DSS operatives were dilly-dallying, the
governor and his team started obstructing them. “When the situation was getting
intolerable around 1am, the Commissioner of Police arrived the scene.
He spoke
with the DSS boss and later went to persuade the governor to allow them do
their work advising that if there was any breach, it should follow due process
later. ‘’The commissioner of police reportedly insisted that the governor
should not obstruct justice.
When the governor refused to give way, the police
boss ordered his ADC to move away from the scene and he complied. ‘’The DSS
attempted to move in but the governor, again without his ADC and other
policemen that accompanied him who were obeying the Cp’s order, started
obstructing them.” This, according to sources, was the stand-off until around
4am when journalists and other interested parties arrived.
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